Re: How Important is Scent Control?
[Re: kinley31]
#8345282
02/17/25 08:47 PM
02/17/25 08:47 PM
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Joined: Oct 2011
Posts: 3,017 Idaho
bearcat2
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Oct 2011
Posts: 3,017
Idaho
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If you don't think there are experts or professionals in trapping u have ur headed buried to deep and should come up for oxygen more often And if you think there are, you’re buying into it. Don’t treat this as rocket science, because it’s not. Well I've always thought the definition of a "professional" was someone who made their living at it. There are definitely professional trappers by that definition. Now some of them I might not consider experts, but there are "expert" as in "extremely good" coyote trappers, both professional and nonprofessional. Now there probably aren't as many experts as there are people who think they are, but to say there are none is blatant stupidity. No it isn't rocket science, but neither is making a really good hamburger, yet while most people can fry an edible burger, there are still expert cooks, and when you eat one of their burgers you know the difference.
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Re: How Important is Scent Control?
[Re: 1Simplemann]
#8345293
02/17/25 08:58 PM
02/17/25 08:58 PM
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Joined: May 2022
Posts: 332 Pennsylvania
RegularJoe
trapper
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trapper
Joined: May 2022
Posts: 332
Pennsylvania
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I hear stories of Kansas and watch a guy named Ed on youtube set trap after trap and catch coyotes, oh...bare handed too. I think the same way trappers have different ideas on scent, coyotes have different levels of alarm to human odor. It seems like greater numbers of dogs in areas with fewer humans could care less about scent, while conversely, areas with more humans and fewer dogs, they figure out fast how lethal we are, and they grow suspect of our activity, expertly avoiding our presence. There are urban coyotes that almost never get seen. Deer do the same thing, mountain deer here act dumb, they can run a long way straight away from danger, a farmland buck with 1/100th the escape cover, takes many fewer chances with his life and will adjust quickly to pressure. Just my take on critters.
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Re: How Important is Scent Control?
[Re: Wanna Be]
#8345899
02/18/25 02:25 PM
02/18/25 02:25 PM
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Joined: Mar 2024
Posts: 80 MT
1Simplemann
OP
trapper
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OP
trapper
Joined: Mar 2024
Posts: 80
MT
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Set and get out, they gonna smell you no matter what. Some critters shy away and some don’t care. Curious why you think you need to step up your game. Not catching? Has the place been trapped before? More important, are there critters there? Generally my first year on a property has me looking like I should have my own channel and website. By year 3 I’m starting to wonder if I should call it quits, lol. I hit my properties twice a year. It will NEVER be like the first year it was trapped, lol. Did they learn me that first year? Or did they learn my smell after twice a year for a couple of years and just avoid the property? Either way it’s a win for the landowners. They get no pics or have issues and I’ve done my job. You’ll find that some things that are supposedly written in stone, aren’t actually written in stone. They’re actually written on a chalk board and can be erased. I think a lot of things are just passed down because so and so said it so it’s the Gospel. A lot of what’s passed down works, a lot is unnecessary as you stated. Some folks go overboard on the scent control and catch. Some don’t pay it any attention and catch. Just bed, blend, and get out. I'm the OP. To answer your question, Basically Yes I'm not catching , Trying to determine why or how to improve my odds. The ranch hasn't been trapped in a while. The neighbor is trapping though. Still I figured it would be easy. It hasn't been. Definitely plenty of dogs there. I saw 3 fluffy ones the other day running away from me at full bore. All of them stopped to look at me. They were lucky I did not have my rifle with me. Previously I had found obvious pinch points between the river and a high bank that had tracks. I made the sets and added a camera. I got them on camera checking out the sets maybe 1 time. He was lucky A Deer had snapped off the trap. I re-set. Total avoidance of the area after that. I think it has to do w/ a couple factors. 1st the sudden influence of human scent in areas that they are not used to encountering it. 2nd They don't have to use the pinch points any more. The river is frozen so they are running the ice. Sunday I found 5 sets of fresh tracks 30 yds from 2 of my sets at one of the obvious pinch points. They were running parallel to the bank and then crossed over to the other side. Old tracks as well. I backtracked them. It was interesting. They had a beat down path on the ice. Not sure how a guy would set that. Anyway, When I hunt, I don't do much for scent control other than play the wind religiously. I've learned that it's generally almost impossible to be scent free. When the wind is wrong for a certain location, don't hunt there. I don't have that option with trapping. I have not been practicing any scent control other than making sure my wax dirt is not burnt. I set w/ my bare hands. I see other more experienced successful trappers doing it so that's how I've been rolling. I figured their curiosity for the gland lure and/or urine would overpower their fear of human scent. Not so much so far . It certainly has been educational.
Last edited by 1Simplemann; 02/18/25 02:26 PM.
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